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Dear Senator Kerry:
Since it has become clear that you will probably be the Democratic
nominee for President, I have spent a great deal of time researching
your war record and your record as a professional politician. The reason
is simple, you aspire to be the Commander in Chief who would lead my
sons and their fellow soldiers in time of war. I simply wanted to know
if you possess the necessary qualifications to be trusted in that
respect.
You see, I belong to a family of proud U.S. veterans. I was a Captain in
the Army Reserve, my father was a decorated Lieutenant in World War II;
and I have four sons who have either served, or are currently serving in
the military. The oldest is an Army Lieutenant still on active duty in
Afghanistan after already being honored for his service in Iraq. The
youngest is an E-4 with the military police. His National Guard unit
just finished their second tour of active duty, including six months in
Guantanamo Bay. My two other sons have served in the national guard and
the navy.
In looking at your record I found myself comparing it not only to that
of my father and my sons, but to the people they served with. My father
served with the 87th Chemical Mortar Battalion in Europe. They landed on
Utah Beach and fought for 317 straight days including the Cherbourg
Peninsula, Aachen, the Hurtgen Forest, and the Battle of the Bulge. You
earned a Silver Star in Vietnam for chasing down and finishing off a
wounded and retreating enemy soldier. My father won a Bronze Star for
single handily charging and knocking out a German machine gun nest that
had his men pinned down. You received three purple hearts for what
appears to be three minor scratches. In fact you only missed a combined
total of two days of duty for these wounds. The men of my father's unit,
the 87th, had to be admonished by their commanding officer because: "It
has been brought to our attention that some men are covering up wounds
and refusing medical attention for fear of being evacuated and
permanently separated from this organization..." It was also a common
problem for seriously wounded soldiers to go AWOL from hospitals in
order to rejoin their units. You used your three purple hearts to leave
Vietnam early.
My oldest boy came home from Iraq with numerous commendations and then
proceeded to volunteer to go to Afghanistan and from there back to Iraq
again. My sons and father have never had anything but the highest regard
and respect for their fellow soldiers. Yet, you came home to publicly
charge your fellow fighting men with being war criminals and to urge
their defeat by the enemy. You even wrote a book that had a cover which
mocked the heroism of the U.S. Marines who raised the flag on Iwo Jima.
Our current crop of soldiers has a philosophy that no one gets left
behind; and they have practiced that from Somalia to the battlefields of
the Middle East. Yet as chairman of a Senate committee looking into
allegations that many of your fellow servicemen had been left behind as
prisoners in Vietnam, you chose to defend the brutal Vietnamese regime.
You even went so far as to refer to the families of the POWs and MIAs as
Professional malcontents, conspiracy mongers, con artists, and
dime-store Rambos.
As a Senator you voted against the 1991 Gulf War, and have repeatedly
voted against funds to supply our troops with the best equipment, and
against money to improve our intelligence capability. I find this
particularly ironic since as a Presidential candidate you are highly
critical of our pre-war intelligence in Iraq.
However, you did vote to authorize the President to go to war, but have
since proceeded to do everything you can to undermine the efforts of our
government and our troops to win. Is this what our fighting men and
women can expect of you if you are their Commander in Chief? Will you
gladly send them to war, only to then aid the enemy by undermining the
morale of our troops and cutting off the weapons they need to win?
Our country is at war, Senator, and as has been the case in every war
since the American Revolution, a member of my family is serving their
country during the war. Now you want me to trust you to lead my sons in
this fight.
Sorry Senator, but when I compare your record to those who have fought
and died for this nation, and are currently fighting and dying, the
answer is not just no, but No!
Sincerely,
Michael Connelly February 14, 2004
Dallas, Texas
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